The expansion of Ancient Greeks into Assyria between the 9th and the 7th centuries BC occurred through mercenary warfare and ...
Despite ancient looting that disturbed the upper portions of the skeleton, including the head, chest, and abdomen, the tomb yielded a treasure trove that speaks volumes about Avar military ...
Archaeologists found a 2,000-year-old Roman camp 7,000 feet up in the Swiss Alps, with sling bullets from the Roman 3rd ...
Archaeologists have discovered in Egypt what they said provides tangible evidence for the story of Moses in the Bible's Book ...
Scared Of on MSN
The Phobia That Made Ancient Warriors Refuse to Fight
The terror that gripped ancient warriors wasn't just about facing an enemy's sword. Something deeper haunted battlefields ...
In the Kelkit district of Gümüşhane, northwestern Türkiye, archaeologists made a remarkable discovery at Satala, an ancient ...
Archaeologists in Egypt discovered a 3,000-year-old fortress along the Horus Military Road, which was referenced in the Book ...
In the winter of 1812, Napoleon’s Grande Armée met its most devastating enemy—not the Russian army, but biology itself. As ...
Ancient DNA reveals Napoleon’s army was decimated by hidden fevers, not typhus, during the disastrous 1812 Russian invasion.
Interesting Engineering on MSN
What killed Napoleon’s army? Scientists finally uncover the 200-year-old truth
Historians have long blamed typhus, a deadly louse-borne disease, for the disaster. But new research suggests otherwise.
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